Nearly 100 Indian companies are scheduled to report fourth-quarter earnings next week, covering a broad sweep of sectors from banking and financial services to technology and consumer goods. The lineup includes Axis Bank, IndusInd Bank, HCLTech, Infosys, Reliance, Groww, Adani Green Energy, Nestle India, and Tata Capital, making it one of the heaviest reporting weeks of the current earnings cycle. Banking names will draw particular attention given ongoing scrutiny of credit quality, deposit growth, and net interest margins across the sector. IndusInd Bank faces added investor focus after recent management-level disclosures that unsettled sentiment. On the technology side, HCLTech and Infosys results will be parsed for deal-flow signals and guidance updates amid a cautious global IT spending environment. Adani Green Energy's numbers will be watched for project execution progress and debt metrics. Collectively, the results will shape near-term sector positioning for fund managers and set the tone for broader market sentiment heading into the new financial year.
Indian startups raised $5.2 billion across 501 deals in H1 2026, down 9% in value but up 7% in deal count year-on-year, per the Inc42 Indian Tech Startup Funding Report. The drop is driven by fewer mega-rounds, while AI funding surged 317% and growth-stage deal activity hit a multi-year high.
The BSE Sensex fell 893 points and the Nifty 50 shed 279 points on June 30, 2026, wiping out roughly Rs 6 lakh crore in investor wealth in a single session. Both indices dropped 1.16%, closing at 76,200.68 and 23,824.10 respectively.
Kotak Mahindra Bank shares fell nearly 3% to Rs 397.6 after CEO Ashok Vaswani announced plans to exit the bank. Investor concern now centres on succession timing and whether the bank's ongoing digital and deposit-growth strategy will stay on track.
South Korea's Kospi dropped 3% at Monday's open while Japan's Nikkei fell 1%, as escalating US-Iran conflict triggered a broad risk-off move across Asian markets. South Korea's heavy reliance on Middle East oil imports makes it especially vulnerable to geopolitical shocks of this kind.